Tensile promotions in display advertising
Subject
Marketing
Publishing details
Social Sciences Research Network
Authors / Editors
Lambrecht A; Tucker C E
Biographies
Publication Year
2017
Abstract
To attract the attention of potential customers, firms often advertise the maximum discount offered on any one good in the store, rather than the specific discount offered for the advertised product. However, it is unclear how such tensile claims of, for example, ‘up to 70%’ off, perform. On the one hand, promoting the maximum discount may help ads grab consumer attention in a cluttered advertising environment. On the other hand, consumers may be looking for credible and specific signals in price promotions, not non-specific tensile claims. We use data from an online retailer that experimented with a large number of display advertising campaigns which varied whether they advertised the maximum price discount they offered, or the actual discount on a specific item. Surprisingly, we find that tensile price claims that promote the maximum discount available are, on average, ineffective. A tensile price claim not only reduces a consumer’s likelihood of clicking on an ad but also, conditional on clicking, reduces their likelihood of adding a product to the shopping cart once they have arrived on the retailer’s website. We present evidence that tensile price claims perform better than specific price claims only in instances when consumers are likely to have little price knowledge. One explanation of these results is that tensile promotions are not considered as credible signals, especially by experienced consumers who have more price knowledge. We discuss implications for retailers as well as for policymakers concerned with consumer protection
Keywords
Price promotion; Online advertising; Targeting; Tensile Promotions
Series
Social Sciences Research Network
Available on ECCH
No